Creative Destruction at Work

Despite the diffusion of big-data-driven technologies, research suggests that labor will continue to have a comparative advantage in social intelligence and creativity. Government development strategies should therefore focus on enhancing these skills, so that they complement, rather than compete with, computer technologies.

OXFORD – Throughout history, technological progress has created enormous wealth but also caused great disruption. The United States’ steel industry, for example, underwent a major transformation in the 1960s, when large, integrated steel mills were gradually put out of business by mini mills, destroying the existing economic base of cities like Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and Youngstown, Ohio. The mini mills, however, vastly increased productivity, and created new types of work elsewhere.

The story of US steel illustrates an important lesson about what the economist Joseph Schumpeter called “creative destruction”: Long-run economic growth involves more than just increasing output in existing factories; it is also implies structural changes in employment.

We can observe a similar phenomenon in the current information and communications technology (ICT) revolution, which has affected most areas of the modern workplace, even those not directly associated with computer programming or software engineering. Computer technologies have created prosperous new businesses (even business clusters) while making certain manufacturing workers redundant and sending older manufacturing cities into decline.

Interesting article, but I'm not sure the steel mills decline was prompted just by chasing output or economies of scale.
There are costs that went unchecked, like legacy and union costs that mount as an industry grows.
As disruptive technologies take hold, that is the time to start worrying about costs, question every dollar and forecast the longevity of each program. Disciplined spending, not just innovation determines the long-term strength of an industry.
It's not enough to say that you need to stay ahead of the innovation curve. You need to manage the costs that surmount while you chase that frontier.

The potential I see is with some of the game-type interfaces that are emerging, such as preferences and electrodes. There is a lot of potential with integrating keywords with electrodes, such as scanning the brain interactively and with trial-and-error integration. I think research has showed that interactivity allows electrodes to work more effectively with preferences. this is something that could work very soon for enhancing visual stimulus in public places, or across platforms, and even perhaps doing some intellectual tasks, like games and word processing. I am excited about the future of this kind of program. Also, there is an aspect of knowledge integration which could be exciting. See for example my book, The Dimensional Philosopher's Toolkit, not to be confused with Baggini and Fosl's classic Philosopher's Toolkit.

As a Finn I can say that we really do see creative destruction over here. Schumpeters term can be of course argued on many levels but yes...a kind of destruction is happening here. The financial crisis hit Finland very hard. Many questions rise - all from justification of "creative destruction" as something good for us - to how long and at what cost it is taking place? Whatever the terminology used we use we can still ask ourselves: does this have to happen in this scale in the 21st Century?

In Finland we have all the problems as many other western countries. Growing inequality. A serious leadership problem as creativity is low. Start-ups are good news and a small piece (although inportant) of the whole.

Our mainstream media is suffering from weak journalism and/or too one-sided reporting (favors right-wing parties - the National Coalition Party is the ruling force). The news have been sold to markets and when markets control the news...well it takes no genious to figure out what that is. We are in a recession and a 9% unemployment rate is a fact. Most of the jobs offered are only part-time jobs for certain periods of time. There's bad moral at workplaces (and society), people work themselves to death (stressing - fear of losing jobs)...literally. Our economic education in schools and universities, and onesided reporting in the MSM, has been astoundingly poor. Ie. neoclassical economics has been repeated time after time as the only solution (a cure for maladies). The country has been going through a painful privatisation project. Much of it has been outsourced to multinational corporations. We suffer from a democratic deficit (as seen in large part of Europe also) as people have lost faith in the political decisionmakers and establishment. People see most of them as corrupt....even in Finland. The right wing parties are in power. Our voter turnout in the latest EU elections 2014 were as low as 41%. That should tell us something about a systemic crisis. It is a disgrace in a sovereign country that wants to be call itself a democracy.

I won't go much further into details but young people turn to alcohol and drugs in excessive amounts (some statistics say otherwise but on the streets one can clearly see a change for the worse). Reality-tv and other amusements to keep people from thinking and questioning is massive - people are escaping the harsh realities even if they are fixable with a political will. We have had (and still do have) opportunistic, narsistic, career-driven technocrats as our elected leaders and that is never an outcome a thriving democracy and economy wants to see. I'm of course a little exaggarating all this (as maybe some of you have read between the lines), but there are real issues here that should be taken into consideration by the leaders. I won't put a lot of of numbers on the screen because that is useless as we can see the results of neoliberal hegenomy to the Western economies worldwide. Although this "creative destruction" has been working overtime, we still have to reassess our views. Question ourselves.

Planet Earth is now at its smallest than maybe ever. One could now call it a very large community. We are all in this together in the end. A change in public opinion always has an effect on political will. Respectfully yours

Having worked for the City of Detroit I can only agree with this column. The GM assembly plants are among the most modern in the world. Detroit simply failed to attract new jobs. Instead of investing in transportation and housing we should have invested safety and education to attract skilled workers.

This article is an excellent take on what needs to be done. New technologies have and will always shift the demand for labor. As it is notoriously difficult to predict future technologies it is essential to invest in transferrable skills.

What a half hearted and sloppy effort of an article. Reiterates well trodden ideas throwing in the usual 'big data' reference for the buzz word factor. And am most puzzled by the reference to Leeds here - Leeds is hardly Detroit - it has been one of the fastest growing UK cities over the last 20 years, is much congratulated on its success of diversifying away from its previous manufacturing base, especially towards IT, and is often cited as a model of success. Did the author actually bother to do any research for this or was it a 10 minute rush job?

"Despite the diffusion of big-data-driven technologies, research suggests that labor will continue to have a comparative advantage in social intelligence and creativity."
Thank god for research. How would we have figured that out without it!

I think the real problem is not the new kind of jobs; the problems is that the automated production and the robotic production, is a real contradiction with the nature of capitalism. From what source could make the capital, the operating surplus that is needed for its accumulation? And you have to know that without accumulation of capital there is not growth in capitalism. The surplus must come from someone who produces more value than he receives for his work. And if those bodies are replaced by “merchandise produced by merchandise”, the source of value get dried!

En excellent and on time view in this article, however, no solutions of how the improving technologies could be used as economic tool for a long term market development: similarly, the ongoing globalization, Chinas industrialization, the internet e.g. should be considered alone with the rising technologies and productivity as reasons for increasing unemployment, indeed.
The article does not get out of the box of the ideology of the modern day trickle-down economics to suggest long-term solutions, and Jesus would say: "One cannot pour new wine into old wineskins".

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